Crab Seafood Sauce

Loading the player ...
Crab Seafood Sauce with: Stephanie Smith

With Stephanie Smith

Just like the lobster ravioli stuffing, Stephanie Smith uses Cognac as the secret ingredient in this sauce. Otherwise it is a fairly straightforward tomato based seafood sauce with crab and cream mixed in.

You will want to simmer the ravioli just after removing them from boiling so that they capture more of the flavors from this exceptional sauce.

Ingredients

2 ounces butter, unsalted
1 tablespoon shallots, chopped
1 clove garlic, chopped
4 ounces crabmeat
2 ounces cognac
5 ounces tomato sauce
10 ounces heavy cream
salt and pepper to taste

Instructions

1. Add butter to a warm sauté pan over medium heat. When butter is melted, sautée shallots and garlic until soft.
2. Add crabmeat and mix.
3. Add cognac and mix until slightly reduced.
4. Add tomato sauce, stir until heated.
5. Add cream and stir until blended. Salt and pepper to taste.
6. When raviolis are cooked, add to sauce and simmer a few minutes.

Serve warm in a bowl or on a plate.

Recipe courtesy of Stephanie Smith, Changing Tides Gift Shop, ACE Hardware, 2011.

Stephanie grew up in Connecticut as a latch key kid of two full time working parents.  When she got home from school she would do experiments in the kitchen with whatever ingredients she could reach. 

“I remember one day after school looking for the peanut butter for a snack, when I could not find it, I decided to make my own.  I got out some butter and some peanuts, put them all into a baggy and rolled it out with a rolling pin.  Hey, how was I supposed to know, at age 6, that peanut butter has no butter!  It didn’t look quite right, and tasted different, but as I recall, it wasn’t half bad.”

Stephanie was in 3rd grade when she decided to make cupcakes for her mom’s birthday.  No recipe of course.  She had watched her mom and grandmother bake, so she knew you needed flour, sugar, eggs and vanilla.  She cannot remember what else she found to dump in, but does remember that they resembled hockey pucks!  Her mom smiled, took a bite, and said how thoughtful she was.  They next day when they were gone, her dad said he’d eaten them all.  She is sure they ended up in the town dump. 

She says that her cooking has improved since then, but has remained a fun and creative outlet for her.  When she was just out of college and teaching in Boston, living on a teacher’s salary was not enough, so she began working for a catering company in Charlestown.  She also started cooking for friend’s dinners and cocktail parties out of her small apartment kitchen in Boston.  The next thing she knew she had trays of food spread into the living room, kitchen and anywhere there was a spot.  Her roommates would take off the minute they saw the grocery bags come in. 

Since she moved to Rockport and married her husband Jay, she has catered many dinners for the masons, catered many events for the family businesses and staff events, catered friends showers and events and entertained many friends. She reads cookbooks for fun, while others read novels.  She is a self-taught cook but experimenting, practicing and of course eating has taught her well.  She is not afraid of flavor and thinks her food reflects that. She loves to see what she can do to improve or embellish other’s recipes.   “It’s fun, enjoyable and makes people happy!”

She also loves to knit, scrap book and is a potter with a wonderful studio.  However, she says that she has no time, unfortunately, for any of those things.  The way I get to be creative is in her kitchen.  She always makes time to cook for her children, family and friends.  After all, to Stephanie, “food is love!”

Share This Page

newsletter sign-up

Contact us

Do you have a comment, question, suggestion or concern? What recipes interest you? Any problems with this site? Let us know.